The following gives an account of false sexual assault and rape allegations, and the reasons women manufactured them, that were commonplace 120 years ago when the below article was written by E. Belfort Bax. Were the methods of evidence-gathering 120 years ago faulty? Definitely. Were some genuine victims of sexual assault disbelieved? Unfortunately, yes. Were […]

To hear some people tell it, there exists a culture where rape is socially acceptable. Not under some foreign “Islamo-fascist” regime in a land far, far away but right here in America. Chris Cantwell has a look.

When is rape not-rape? When a woman forces herself onto a man’s unwilling erection. That, at least, is how most laws insist on looking at it. If they looked at it otherwise, and society looked at it otherwise, the entire discussion of sexual aggression would change for the better.

Amy Schumer is a well-noted American comedienne who has been lauded and celebrated by feminists who laughed at and cheered her story of a sexual encounter that, had she been a man and he a woman, feminists likely would have called rape.

Men, those crazed and out of control beasts must be trained to override the violent instinct to rape women – so says the feminist narrative of “rape culture.” As wider culture begins to reject this feminist stereotype, John Hembling warns that biographies of those who perpetuated it will be eternally stained with the conclusion ‘there lived a bigot’.

Imagine you are accused of a terrible crime you didn’t commit. Jon Gunnarsson recounts the story of school teacher Horst Arnold who was falsely accused of rape and imprisoned without a shred of evidence. Despite being eventually found innocent, the corrupt judiciary who placed him there have never been held to account.

The current FBI definition of rape refers to the penetration of the vagina or anus without the consent of the victim. Clearly this erases all victims of rape who are forced to penetrate, generally men or boys forced to have sex with women. To help correct this definition we urge you to join us in writing to key organisations, starting with RAINN on March 15.

All men are potential rapists says feminism, so all women should go out and buy “Anti-Rape Wear,” a recent reinvention of the chastity belt designed to deter men’s rapey penises. Attila L. Vinczer gives an assessment of “AR Wear” and the hysteria that birthed it.

Dear Mr Zuckerberg, can the classic document film Rape Culture, which was the genesis of the term “Rape Culture” and was primarily about male victims, have it’s own page please? Or is Kiss My Ass a better option? Isaac T. Quill ponders the question, and tries to find the answer…